Uses of insects as human food in Papua New Guinea, Australia, and North‐East India: Cross‐cultural considerations and cautious conclusions

IF 1.3 4区 医学 Q4 NUTRITION & DIETETICS Ecology of Food and Nutrition Pub Date : 1997-09-01 DOI:10.1080/03670244.1997.9991513
V. Meyer-Rochow, S. Changkija
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引用次数: 73

Abstract

Taxonomic identifications and vernacular names are given of insects as well as some spiders which are consumed as food by members of the following ethnic communities: Ao‐Naga (North‐east India), Chimbu (Papua New Guinea, Central Highlands), Onabasulu (Papua New Guinea, Southern Highlands), Kiriwina (Western Pacific, Trobriand Islands), Walbiri (Central Australian desert), Pintupi (Central Australian desert), and Maori (New Zealand, Aotearoa). Differences and similarities of entomophagy habits between the groups are examined in the light of cultural, ethnic, and linguistic relationships. It is postulated that prehistorically two centres in the region under discussion existed where entomophagy evolved and from where the practice spread: Southern India and South‐east Asia. It is further postulated that the sugar‐containing insects were the first to find a place in the regular diet of prehistoric man, followed by insects which were rich in fats and lipids, and finally those which contained mostly protein. Acc...
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巴布亚新几内亚、澳大利亚和印度东北部将昆虫用作人类食物:跨文化考虑和谨慎结论
昆虫的分类鉴定和方言名称以及一些蜘蛛被以下民族社区成员作为食物食用:Ao - Naga(印度东北部),Chimbu(巴布亚新几内亚,中部高地),Onabasulu(巴布亚新几内亚,南部高地),Kiriwina(西太平洋,特罗布里安群岛),Walbiri(澳大利亚中部沙漠),Pintupi(澳大利亚中部沙漠)和毛利人(新西兰,奥特罗阿)。不同群体之间的食虫习惯的差异和相似之处是根据文化、种族和语言关系来研究的。据推测,在讨论的地区,史前存在两个食虫行为的进化和传播中心:南印度和东南亚。进一步的假设是,含糖昆虫首先在史前人类的日常饮食中占有一席之地,其次是富含脂肪和脂质的昆虫,最后是主要含有蛋白质的昆虫。Acc……
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来源期刊
CiteScore
3.50
自引率
0.00%
发文量
23
审稿时长
>12 weeks
期刊介绍: Ecology of Food and Nutrition is an international journal of food and nutrition in the broadest sense. The journal publishes peer-reviewed articles on all aspects of food and nutrition -- ecological, biological, and cultural. Ecology of Food and Nutrition strives to become a forum for disseminating scholarly information on the holistic and cross-cultural dimensions of the study of food and nutrition. It emphasizes foods and food systems not only in terms of their utilization to satisfy human nutritional needs and health, but also to promote and contest social and cultural identity. The content scope is thus wide -- articles may focus on the relationship between food and nutrition, food taboos and preferences, ecology and political economy of food, the evolution of human nutrition, changes in food habits, food technology and marketing, food and identity, and food sustainability. Additionally, articles focusing on the application of theories and methods to address contemporary food and nutrition problems are encouraged. Questions of the relationship between food/nutrition and culture are as germane to the journal as analyses of the interactions among nutrition and environment, infection and human health.
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